But from past experience with the mints actions , there might be a couple in some billionaires collection . Though if any existed I'd think they would be in the Smithsonian .
Interesting. There's a bunch of these for sale on eBay for around $22 each. Most are calling them "fantasy coins" but not really saying where they got them.
Oh Great. Now we have to be on the look out for Fantasy Replica's of Daniel Carr's Fantasy Coin! Mint mark placement and price are the first indicators since nobody would ever sell their Daniel Carr piece for less than its original issue price! ($110-$190)
"Oh Great. Now we have to be on the look out for Fantasy Replica's of Daniel Carr's Fantasy Coin!" I find this very amusing. What protection does a fantasy rip off of a real coin design have?
ANACS has agreed to grade and slab Daniel Carr's coins/tokens/medals. So, no, Daniel did NOT slab those. They were submitted by folks who had purchased them from the Moonlight Mint.
None since the fantasy rip offs are taking advantage of the market that the Moonlight Mint created. The value that the Moonlight Mint has in the coins are detail production logs which identify and tabulate the total coins and varieties produced. For the rip offs, folks have no idea what the metallic content might be or how many have been made. Carr's Coins, on the other hand, are all over stamped on genuine US coins.
If you think it's a US Mint Made 1964-D Peace dollar then I suggest you back away from the computer and iPhone.